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Assessing Life Skills in Young Working Adults. Part 2: The Application of an Alternative Instrument.
Peer reviewedVan der Wal, Rachel Jacoba; Van der Wal, Ruurd – Education + Training, 2003
Data collected from young adults in a life skills course with collage and stimulus instruments were classified as follows: reaction, remembering, learning, behavior change, and life philosophy. Pictorial stimuli proved effective in assessing affective goals and usefully supplemented other forms of assessment. (SK)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Alternative Assessment, Collage, Employment Potential
Peer reviewedWarfield, Robert D.; Goldstein, Marc B. – Counseling and Values, 1996
Suggests that a condition of "negative spirituality" underlies and sustains alcoholism and perhaps all addictions. Argues that a secure recovery is not possible unless a "spiritual awakening," such as envisioned by Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), is achieved. A broadly applicable conceptual model of spirituality is inferred from the…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Alcoholism, Counseling Objectives, Counseling Techniques
Peer reviewedBarth, Joan M.; Bastiani, Andrea – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 1997
Examined relations between 90 four-year-old preschoolers' social behavior and emotion recognition accuracy and bias with familiar classmates. Found that recognition biases were more important than recognition accuracy in predicting social behavior, that angry recognition biases negatively influenced social behavior, and that recognition accuracy…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Anger, Bias, Facial Expressions
Peer reviewedHoffner, Cynthia; Cantor, Joanne – Human Communication Research, 1990
Examines the influence of prior information on children's emotional responses to a frightening program. Finds that forewarning of the threat increased anticipatory fear but did not affect emotional responses, and that prior knowledge of the happy outcome reduced anticipatory fear but had an inconsistent effect on fear during the threatening scene.…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Audience Response, Children, Communication Research
Peer reviewedHobson, R. Peter; Lee, Anthony – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 1989
Twenty-one autistic and 21 nonautistic retarded adolescents and young adults were compared on British Picture Vocabulary Scale items considered emotion-related or highly abstract. Autistic subjects' lower scores on emotion-related items suggest autism-specific impairments in grasping these concepts. No differences were found for abstract/concrete…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Adolescents, Affective Behavior, Autism
Peer reviewedPerse, Elizabeth M. – Human Communication Research, 1990
Examines the validity of audience involvement in the context of local television news by testing the relationships among (1) strength of news viewing motivation and involvement intensity; (2) type of news viewing motivation and involvement orientation; and (3) cognitive and emotional involvement. Finds that audience involvement during message…
Descriptors: Adults, Affective Behavior, Audience Response, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewedMontada, Leo – Zeitschrift fur Padagogik, 1989
Asserts that emotions are based on cognitive appraisals of occurrences. Argues that cognitive models have heuristic value for research and practice and examines objections concerning the validity of those models. Discusses the usefulness of these models for several educational and developmental goals. (KO)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Psychology, Educational Objectives
Peer reviewedFinnas, Leif – Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education, 1989
Reviews U.S., British, German, and Scandinavian research on factors influencing the degree of liking or disliking music. Focuses on research relevant to such factors influencing musical preferences among young people receiving general music training as: specific characteristics of music; the effect of familiarity with music; the effect of…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Influences
Peer reviewedKochanska, Grazyna; And Others – Child Development, 1989
Examines the relationship between self-reported child-rearing attitudes and practices and actual child management among 68 mothers and their children aged 16-44 months. Results indicate that the authoritarian and authoritative patterns of child rearing attitudes were positively related to a number of child management strategies. (RJC)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Child Rearing, Discipline, Mothers
Peer reviewedMalatesta, Carol Z.; And Others – Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 1989
Examines the course of emotion expression development during the first 2 years of 58 full-term and preterm children through videotapes of mother/infant pairs. Mothers' contingency behavior appeared to have an effect on emotional development, as did birth status and gender. Prematurity was associated with differential socioemotional development.…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Attachment Behavior, Child Development, Emotional Development
Peer reviewedBraverman, Mark; And Others – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 1989
The study of affect comprehension in 15 children with pervasive developmental disorders (ages 7-10) and normal children matched for mental age found that the disabled children were impaired on affect matching compared to the controls and were impaired on face and affect matching relative to their own performance on object matching. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Comprehension
Peer reviewedPistole, Carole M. – Journal of College Student Development, 1995
Probed attachment-related differences in emotional responses to ended romantic relationships. Multivariate analysis of variance revealed that securely attached students recalled a more positive emotional experience after a relationship concluded, whereas persons with fearful and preoccupied styles reported a more negative experience overall.…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Attachment Behavior, College Students, Emotional Response
Peer reviewedSeegers, Gerard; Boekaerts, Monique – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 1996
Examination of (n=186) eighth-grade students found marked differences between boys and girls on a mathematics test that were paralleled by differences in both trait-like self-referenced cognitions (academic self-concept of mathematical ability, goal orientation, and attribution) and task-specific appraisals. Contains 77 references. (Author/MKR)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Beliefs, Cognitive Style, Grade 8
Peer reviewedVaughn, Brian E.; And Others – Child Development, 1994
Three samples of 24- to 54-month-old children with Down's syndrome were assessed using the Ainsworth Strange Situation Procedure (ASSP) of attachment security and scored according to traditional protocols. Found that developmentally younger subjects were more difficult to classify using the standard scoring rules and that the ASSP may be measuring…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Age Differences, Attachment Behavior, Downs Syndrome
Peer reviewedCummings, Anne L.; Hallberg, Ernest T. – Canadian Journal of Counselling, 1995
Postsession written responses of six female clients in intensive short-term counseling were examined using qualitative analyses. At the end of each counseling session, clients described the most important event in the session and their feelings about it. Two patterns, Consistent Change and Interrupted Change, emerged from the data analysis. (JBJ)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Change, Cognitive Development, Coping


